Thursday Trivia

Same guidelines apply. We'll continue with the mix and match of sports, TV pop culture, history and music, of course.

1. At what Washington, D.C., intersection was Delores Landingham, President Jed Bartlett's administrative assistant, fatally injured by a drunk driver in a traffic accident? (Bonus: She'd just boght her first new car. What brand was it?).
ANSWER: "18th and Potomac," the title of the episode in which she dies. I thought she had purchased a Subaru.

2. Who was the first major-league player to hit a grand slam off of Roger Clemens?
ANSWER: Gary "The Rat" Gaetti.

3. Who was the backup crew for Apollo 11?
ANSWER: Jim Lovell, Fred Haise, Jr., and William Anders. Haise made it up on Apollo 13, as did Lovell, who had already flown on Apollo 8.

4. Who are the only three college athletes to be named Sports Illustrated Sportsmen of the Year (note: the 1980 US Olympic hockey team doesn't count, as it was a team, not an individual, selection).
ANSWER: Jerry Lucas, Terry Baker, and Chip Rives, a football player from Wake Forest who was honored for community service along with a bunch of others in 1989, I think.

5. This is a very tough one. Which Cleveland Indians' pitcher has the highest strikeouts-per-nine innings ratio in franchise history, of those who faced at least 1,500 batters (a decent sample size) while pitching for the Indians? (Here's a hint: It's not Bob Feller, Gary Bell or Barry Latman).
ANSWER: Paul Shuey, 10.04 Ks per nine innings.

MUSICAL BONUS: According to Billboard Magazine, what was the No. 1 single in the United States on the Bicentennial, July 4, 1976?
ANSWER: It was indeed "Afternoon Delight" by the Starland Vocal Band, an SportsJournalists.com favorite.